Saturday, February 22, 2014

If you’ve seen (or read) the Secret Life of Walter Mitty, you might find it a strange and unbelievable story. It’s about one man’s
heady, exciting fantasies, and its stark contrast to his simple outer-world
life.

Truth is, such stories are everyday, common-place stories. It’s
about time the rest of the world learned about the existence of a group of people
who have been largely ignored and left out. People who have internal worlds and
thoughts that are richer, more heart-rending, more thrilling than any movie
ever conceived. People who are more sensitive, intuitive, intelligent and empathetic than we know. People who share their ideas and stories on Quora.

The final scene of Walter Mitty was perfect, and the movie finished with a stirring end. For just this once, it is the quiet, intriguing,
hardworking but unrewarded person, who is recognized and celebrated.

The biggest flaw in societies and organizations is that whoever has the
loudest voice has the most followers, and whoever has the most followers has
the most power. Unfortunately, the best speakers don’t always have the best
ideas or intentions. Therefore, the side-effects of this reward system, is that
everyday life is laced with meaningless facades, and plagued by unfairness and
oppression. And the consequence of the suppression of true meritocracy is the
world we are living in, how it is less ideal than what it should have been.

posted by kimberle at Saturday, February 22, 2014

Monday, February 04, 2013

I had the luxury of having the apartment to myself yesterday night, so I thought I'd try to make a cake. Since P likes red velvet cake and (I think) dinosaurs, I bought a dinosaur cake pan from Wilton. Here's what I did:

When done, use a knife to level the top of the cake. Do this quickly because you want to tap cake out before it cools.

Tap cake out onto a piece of corrugated cardboard wrapped with aluminum foil with a dollop of frosting in the middle to act as a glue. This is so sturdy that it's a breeze to transport even without a box. Let cool before moving on to the next step. You can even put the cake in the freezer for a couple of minutes. (Unless you share the freezer with 127369 other people, and there's no space there.)

This part is the hardest: Using a spatula, coat the sides and top of the cake with cream cheese frosting. (I used store-bought frosting.) Let sit >1h in the fridge to harden. This is called crumb coating, and helps seals in the moisture of the cake so it keeps better.

Next, I used store-bought black icing in a tube to pipe the outline of the dinosaur. Let sit in the fridge to harden (for as long as you have time for). I did not do this because I was eager to color my cake!

Next, I used vanilla buttercream icing with food coloring to decorate the cake. I think it goes well with the cream cheese frosting and red velvet cake. Of course, the type and color of icing will be up to you. Put your icing in a piping bag with an adapter and star-shaped tip, and with a 90degree angle, color the cake star-by-star. The smaller the star, the easier to color small areas and the nicer it looks.

The finishing touches: A border with a leaf-tip pipped in a overlapping wave-life pattern, and a candle.

That's it! Baking the cake took 1h, crumb coating took 1.5h including setting time, and decorating it took 0.5h. I have an idea on what to try when I next get the apartment to myself (or get a studio, whichever comes first). Hint: it's a kind of cake, but it's savory and contains the meat of a crustacean.

posted by kimberle at Monday, February 04, 2013

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

When you come face-to-face with this huge gap between your aspirations and reality, it's like a blow to your stomach, and you can think about nothing else other than stopping your stomach from giving way and throwing up. You'll want to seek shelter in friends, and in sleep, and realize that nothing can hold you back from falling into the chasm. A slap, a splash of cold water to the face, two cups of coffee.. wake up.

posted by kimberle at Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Thursday, November 22, 2012

It’s only when I’m alone that I stop to notice the things
around me, such as the lighted trees outside the hospital. The first sign of
Christmas lights. Reminds me of Champs Elysees in Paris.

It also reminds me that I love living in a small, quiet bubble
of a town, rather than in a big city with lots of tall buildings and noise and
traffic. While I don’t connect with many people, I often find myself being
moved by, and growing attached to places. Unexplored museums, diners by the
highway, parks, movie theatres, mini golf arcades excite me. Or perhaps it’s
the wanderlust that comes with owning a car for the first time.

Lighted trees outside the hospital

This Thanksgiving, although my experiments are just not working (and those that work show results against my hypothesis), my apartment is infested with big brown ants, and I have no topic for my qual, I cannot be more thankful for where I am now. It could well be that for the first time in my life, I know with 100% certainty the few things important to me. And I have them. I haven't been more excited to start the next few years of my life. (Not the next few weeks, because I've too much crap due then.)

Happy thanksgiving everyone!

posted by kimberle at Thursday, November 22, 2012

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

It
seems like the last of the warm days are over. What better way to
celebrate the end of of a long, fruitless day in school than hiding in
the quiet of P’s apartment and sharing a pot of steamy seafood stew.

Here are some mussles, lobster, sotong, prawns and scallops in a carrot/tomato spicy soup.

I’m
looking very forward to thanksgiving. A little more space, a little
more time and a little more solitude. Looking forward to be able to stay
home, and do some (experimenting with) cooking and singing.

posted by kimberle at Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Where am I?

It’s been a year since I’ve started grad school. The days are long but the years fly by. I can no longer use the excuse of being a hapless first year to bumble around, be driven around, and to play around.

Now that I'm a second year, things will start to get serious now. (Seriousness, of course, is open to interpretation.) Second years and above are working on their thesis projects. They have their freedom and autonomy, yet are anchored by daily coffee rituals and regular weekend activities. The skis in their cupboards have gone down more than several mountains and they can always find comfort in their favourite dinner spots. They have their cars, their well-lived-in apartments, and their credit histories. And maybe life will be like slightly burnt chocolate cake - not perfect! But nobody's really complaining.

If adolescence ends at 18, I’ve only had 6 years of adulthood. Most of them were spent mugging and earning money, but in the last year I did many, many things for the first time (some of which probably shouldn’t be written here lol). I’m still testing and trying, still figuring EVERYTHING out; what comforts, what excites, what revolts, and what merely tickles. Because at the end of the (presumably long) day, all I’ve got is who I am… and chocolate cake.

So here I am, hiding inside the walls of academia, outside which girls my age are getting married and mothering! Of course the next stage will have joys, pleasures and self-discovering epiphanies of its own, but I’m not there yet. I am still here.

posted by kimberle at Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Thanksgiving is over so it's officially Christmas.

Christmas has never been my favourite time of the year. There’s no snow, Santa or presents; insetad I get forcefed through every sense organ images of happy people in their happy families.

This is not my life.

While everyone's dining, partying or playing poker, I'd be watching Home Alone on TV for the 156th time. And after I get fat from eating all those candy canes and log cakes, I’d worry about the future. The future meaning transitioning into the New Year and feeling unbearably old.

So while I am enjoying my eggnogg latte and jazzy christmas tunes now, I can’t wait for Christmas to be over. Yet, this/next year may be different because:- I have flexible working hours (one of the perks of being a labber)- I have a lot of money- I’ve stopped counting how old I am. Sadly, I’m neither wine nor cheese but at least I’ll get cheaper car insurance at the price of saggier skin.

So even if there’s no snow or Santa, at least there’ll be presents. And even if I have to watch a few more romcoms to get me through the season, at least I can go to cinemas on a quiet weekday afternoon (and be the only person in the theatre, or only person who with a non-senior citizen ticket). Life has a way of going on. Now, if only I can sleep earlier and cut down on my chardonnay consumption, I’m pretty sure I can stay alive for a little longer.

I remember we were driving driving in your carThe speed so fast I felt like I was drunkCity lights lay out before usAnd your arm felt nice wrapped 'round my shoulderAnd I had a feeling that I belongedAnd I had a feeling I could be someone, be someone, be someone

posted by kimberle at Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Sunday, October 02, 2011

How thin and fragile is the thread that binds two lovers, or that separates two solitudes.

I'm ready to pay attention. To listen to his every epiphany, to laugh at all his jokes that has missed its punchline, to ache at the tiniest scrape on his hands, to learn his history and chronicle his memories, to understand and empathize, to build and to trust. How nice, that the moment I loved him, I felt the rest of my life and existence would not be enough to care for him.

Love transcends boundaries. But not the boundary of time. Because "I love you" should only ever be taken to mean "for now".

posted by kimberle at Sunday, October 02, 2011

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Today marks the end of my first week in Stanford.

And today is a good day. Not just because the weather was impeccably perfect (sunshiny, warm and breezy), or that the food today was nice (chicken soup, fried claypot rice, krispy kreme and naked juice), or that we went clubbing-style karaoke and I had a tonne of fun screaming "fuck you", but because I'm very contented with where I am today. AT risk of soudning hypocritical, I'll be brutally honest and admit I'm dimwitted, and at best average. No reason why I get a full, padded scholarship to live it up in the Golden STate. ANd here I am, soaking up every morsel of this experience. It's a time for positive reinvention!

ANyway I realised three things.

First, that I really love singing. Second, that stepping outside your comfort zone you'll realize it's much wider than you actually thought. Third, that everything will fall perfectly in place.. as long as you're not fussy about what "perfectly" means. (Right, so for now it has to mean not making it through an audition for an acapella group I REALLY wanted to join.)

You could travel the worldBut nothing comes closeTo the Golden CoastOnce you party with usYou'll be falling in loveOooooh oh oooooh

Monday, August 22, 2011

My friend is grieving. When I was grieving, I thought I’d try to encourage myself like I’d encourage someone. I’d cheer myself on, force a smile and hold it there for 10 seconds, and tell myself that I’ll be alright. It was only after I decided that I needed to experience the full depth of my sorrow that I began to feel better. That came with bouts of crying due to the awful, unbearable pain, crippling self doubt and utter disgust at myself. I even resorted to medicinal chocolate (and chocolate cake) until I contemplated joining Overeaters Anonymous.

So when people talk about love and marriage, I immediately feel as ignorant as if I were thrown into the 87th Plenary Conference on Quantum Physics and Supersonics. But despite the “weird” nature of my past “relationships”, I do know the difference between love and care and flattered fancy. Attraction is often real, but affection not (at best fleeting, and at worst feigned). I’ve seen two people pretending to be just friends, but would do anything for/with the other. And two people pretending to be a couple with a wall of jealousy, contempt and distrust between them, which eventually gets so high until nobody can hear what’s going on at the other side. Sad, but not yet tragic.

Some days I feel there’re only two places I can find love – Cambridge and Singapore. Perhaps if I could stay in either those places, I’d find a guy willing to spend nights discussing my daily epiphanies, who would celebrate each anniversary with me with a toast to “many more blissful years to come”. We’d join the world in ring-shopping and hunnymooning. We’d be idealists, and even if our castles in the air crumble, at least we wouldn’t be alone picking up the pieces. Alas, those places have almost already become hazy childhood memories. Now, that’s tres tres tragic.

posted by kimberle at Monday, August 22, 2011

Monday, August 15, 2011

These days I’m craving simplicity - easy tshirt and jeans to work, a hot mug of tea to start the day, and a slow long swim to end the week. I’m winning the Academy Award for looking so serene on the surface, but actually I’m turning myself inside-out trying to get out of my mind. It’s been such a heartbreaking and aching place to stay the last few weeks. Thank God for friends. Although I could use a shoulder for a long cry, I guess a quick one-armed embrace will suffice. But I know I can’t use friends as therapists all the time. And besides, I’m not taking their advice.

Anyway, the last week in review.

Monday: My PD showed me a picture of blue balls.. on mice.

Tuesday: National day! This is home, trulyyy, where I know I must be. WHeree my dreams wait for mee. My dreams won’t wait for me 5 years, will they?

Wednesday: Watched Horrible Bosses.

Thursday: Baked a chocolate raspberry cake.

Friday: Went to PI’s house for some shisha! Ooohhh

Saturday: Don’t remember where this day went. But there was definitely moscato involved.

Sunday: Went to Wild Wild Wet and got really seasick.

posted by kimberle at Monday, August 15, 2011

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Last night Bill took me out for dinner and a tour of the city. We had pizza at Pizanos, and some beers at the bar. Because I love the sky scrapers, we walked around The Loop. The Trump Tower, Willis Tower, Hard Rock Hotel, Tribune Tower… Then we walked by the river and talked about love and history and being gay.

When I got back it was midnight and she was already asleep. I took a shower and crept into bed next to her. The next morning I heard her leaving the room. I tried going back to sleep. She came back a few minutes later… “Good morning, I bought breakfast for you!” with a cinnamon bun and OJ for me, and some coffee for herself. And then I woke up.

posted by kimberle at Sunday, July 24, 2011

Friday, July 22, 2011

And Chicago awakes! It's 7am in the windy city and I was awakened by the smell of coffee and the dripping sound of the coffee maker. We're on the 20th floor of the Hyatt Regency, overlooking the river and the big buildings.

For the reception yesterday there was 10 x wine, 10 x cheese, 10 x cold meats, 10 x olives/other cold vegs. She piled on the cheddar, the mozzarella, the brie and the blue, as well as the olives, while I piled on the asparagus. Those who know me well will know that asparagus is one of my favourite foods (but definately after Thai of course).

After a glass of Riesling each, and then a bottle of chilled Moscato in our room, a movie about alien cockroaches, a movie about alien slugs, some ice cream, we fell asleep.

The next day we went to Navy Pier.

L: We could walk.. or we could rent a bike and bike along the river...M: OR we could kayak ON the river. I kayak very well...L: U have no musclesM: What?!!! I can do MANY pullups and I'm SUPER strongL: Then why always ask me open bottles for you in the lab?

We walked, then we sat on the Ferris wheel.

posted by kimberle at Friday, July 22, 2011

Saturday, July 09, 2011

I had lunch with some non-native english speakers the other day.

Me: So where do you usually dive?A: I dove in..B: Dove?? It's diven, no? (pronounced dee-ven)C: Mmm... dave?D: It should be dived..A: I dove, but I have dived. Anyway, I dove in..

This talk about lunch is making me hungry. And goodness! I just ate an entire tub of Anderson's ice cream. Every Sunday night I get depressed and resort to medicinal chocolate, and popcorn and ice cream. One day it's going to show. One day my legs will look like they're melting, and my arms will look like I drink bacon grease for breakfast.

Connie Talbot is all grown up! She's such an angel. :')) I swear I'm going to marry a singer.

Never mind, I'll find someone like youuuI wish nothing but the best, for you tooDon't forget me, I begged, I remember you saidSometimes it lasts in love, But sometimes it hurts insteaadd

posted by kimberle at Saturday, July 09, 2011

Monday, June 13, 2011

I want to go to New Orleans. I want to go to New Orleans like a guy trapped in a desert wants water, like a Cambridge student in May wants sleep. I want to walk around the city, listen to music, buy a tshirt, be alone, talk to myself, talk to the universe, cry till I choke, laugh, read books, sip a chai latte, write.

I’ll have to wait. It’s about 3 months till a whole new life in a whole new place with new people. 3 months. That is all that is standing between me and a sunshine-filled, no-set-bedtime, no-parental-restrictions life.

Breakfast: Chocolate on my bed while watching Archer or IASIP.Bath: Optional.Housework: Minimal.Laundry: Unnecessary.Lunch: Expired sandwich on bed while watching Archer or IASIP. Work: Begins after lunch. Dinner: Whatever I can find at 11pm. Feeling too small to fail: time-to-time(feel free to translate time-to-time as daily)

But I’m getting older. (No surprise to anyone operating on this plane of reality.) And we all know, a smart woman, a kind woman, is one who has a devoted husband, who takes care of him and each of her children, who invites people to her home, offer them food and have them sit around a table and joke and laugh and tell stories. Thinking about the challenges I'd face as I try to grow from a selfish 22yo, to a woman who tries to be everything she can for her family, and uhh yes, for the pursuit of knowledge (also known as my job).

posted by kimberle at Monday, June 13, 2011

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

posted by kimberle at Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

There is a hope that lifts my weary head,A consolation strong against despair,That when the world has plunged me in its deepest pit,I find the Saviour there!Through present sufferings, future’s fear,He whispers ‘courage’ in my ear.

posted by kimberle at Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Monday, May 02, 2011

I’m scared. I’m not looking for a designer job or lifestyle. I just want a sustainable one. In every facet of my wretched existence, I’ve screwed up royally. I would blame the quarter-life crisis for feeling like that, but it may be self-indulgent to call it a crisis, and it doesn’t look like it’s going away a few years from now. I kinddaa know where I’m going, but I don’t know where I am now.

And I’ve got 4 months to change that.

In any case, I have plans. After watching Thor today, I want to marry Tom Hiddleston. How can anyone be so perfectly chiselled! How can anyone be so beautiful! I digress. So, for our hunnymoon, we’d go to a Malibu resort. Me and him would walk barefooted on a powdery beach under the moonlight. His damp hair in the summer breeze, his dark eyes and ivory-white skin.....Then we’d have dinner in a darkened restaurant, thick with the smell of wood and salt. Instead of violins, I’d listen to him tell me about his battle stories and show me his battle scars. Meanwhile, of course, I’d win the Nobel prize for finding the cure for cancer or HIV.

And I would dream of all that tonight if I’m lucky. So, in case things don’t go exactly like plan A, I have a plan B. This would be when I’m somewhere in the middle of grad school, single, past 25 and well past my prime, hanging out with my single female friends every weekend, and single. I would get hold of a rich, lonely banker or trader (or both), tell them I like them, put on a skirt and sing them this song:

If plan B works, I can quit grad school. By that I mean leave the lab before 10pm since I don’t have to worry about grants, stipends or becoming a PI. It’s a pity the evolution of human intelligence hasn’t left the males behind. Damn. And I’d need to buy some guile, which isn’t found in this country. Plan C: I’m old but not yet dead. Me and my dog would fill our meaningful lives with memberships to Walmart, Weight Watchers and Garett Popcorn’s Big Eaters Club... I guess I know where my life is now.

posted by kimberle at Monday, May 02, 2011

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Terrible terrible thing to happen, even to one of the most well-prepared nations. I'm a bit ashamed this is the first time I'm making a significant donation to my own species (instead of to save the whales or Asian rhinos). This is why we really need to develop teleporting technology, then people stuck in rubble can teleport themselves out, and to safety.

Anyway, I’m mortified at the thought of spending the rest of my twenties in California! I feel like I’m slowly going uphill in a roller coaster completely unprepared with no escape in sight and nothing to hold on to except my own knees. Say hello to Walgreens, Trader Joes and a staple diet of Prozac? And not to mention earthquakes?

And I'll always be thinking about Boston. When I was there I lived in a small neighbourhood where people I met on the streets would greet "Hey! You must be new here!" For breakfast, I'd have apples or cereal with Liz. For lunch I'd have seminar pizza. In the afternoon I'd walk to Prudential Center to get a protein shake and free Godiva. For dinner, fried eggs or grilled hamburgers. During the weekends, playing with Linus, Leslie and Yvonne. I miss those days very very much. But it's just summer love.

She said I think I'll go to Boston I think I'll start a new life,I think I'll start it over, where no one knows my name,Get out of California, I'm tired of the weather,I think I'll get a lover and fly him out to SpainOh yeah and I think I'll go to Boston,I think that I'm just tiredI think I need a new town, to leave this all behind

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

Monday, January 17, 2011

My favourite song on my favourite radio channel when I was driving home from lab at 10pm. I got lost and went to Changi.

Tears were rolling around in my eyes, like plating beads on an agar plate. Even when I'm not crying, the tears are nearby, just beneath the surface.

Was reading the comments for the song:

My special friend, a Sgt. on duty in Afganistan emailed this vid to me, and of course it brought tears to my eyes. Such﻿ an incredible song. God bless our troops. oxoxo -BBoydgirl1

I'm Currently in the Air Force. Just came back from Afghan. I will be home in a﻿ week. I can't wait. -lamomia913

Its been 6 years since I left my country... Left my family, my girlfriend that im going to marry soon. and this song made me feel enough to leave them... now its time for me to come home and please let me go home... I miss you now!﻿ -AdiAudebarn

11,757 people have a﻿ home to go to -TheModern117

118 PEOPLE DON'T HAVE A﻿ HOME. -musicxlaurete

beautifull song, just read in his book that he wrote it about his ex when they broke up after 8 years.﻿ -plumbersmate19

such an emotional song.... reminds me of the best place in the world with my dad... Australia﻿ :'( -KoolKatPoc

i haven't been home for 6 months, I haven't seen my girlfriend for 6months,and i have been listening this song﻿ for 6 months ,, Worst TORTURE -Eibibory

I still write letters to my grandpa, who passed away in 2008, and keep them. I miss him since we were very close. He was my closure when my parents were arguing. This song makes me think﻿ of him. Love you Papa Roland! -BeastOfOlympus

this song reminds me of my ex boyfriend...I don't﻿ feel home anywhere without him-ErikaSzabo1

due to the snow stuck away from home....not sure if﻿ I will be able to get home to my wife for xmas :( -dirtyriceboy

I really want go home...﻿ -gigamwalimu

gonna go home,i miss my family﻿ -ucag20

posted by kimberle at Monday, January 17, 2011

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Job - How to sufferPsalms - How to prayProverbs - How to actEcclesiastes - How to enjoySong of Solomon - How to love

The pastor said today, just flip open the bible and see what God wants you to read. So I did, and I was at Luke. Actually, cos my bookmark was there. "So therefore, whoever of you does not renounce all that he has cannot be my disciple." Luke 14:33

Thinking about the rest of my life, I'm truly mortified. I can't get my head around the fox gene evolution thing, I can't stop thinking about reason number 406 why I love the ex (yes I had a list, this was a picture of the graze boxes he sent), I can't put on a happy face and bounce around like I've swallowed the sun.

Everything has headed south - I've lost the all the weight I've gained since I broke my leg, I've lost control of the temper I didn't even know I had, I've lost interest in labbing, I've even lost a long-time dream- to look a blue whale in the eye.

"There is such a great fire in one's soul, and yet nobody comes to warm themselves there, and passersby see nothing but a little smoke coming from the top of the chimney, and go on their way."

posted by kimberle at Sunday, January 16, 2011

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

It didn't work out.

No matter how seductive the idea seemed to be, I'd dig in my heels and tell myself I wasn't going anywhere. Not like there was anywhere else to go, and I always found myself running heart-first into his arms, like a child running into his mother's embrace after school.

It took the Universe 3 years to finally convince me that I should take a leap into the unknown, which was much more than loneliness. I'm in this world where theme parks, romantic European cities and train rides, BFFs don't and will never exist. Yet, the fact that I'm hungry now tells me that the Earth's still spinning.

I loved the fact that we were two very ugly people.

And the moral? Never say never. I've been fighting a losing battle against all the forces of the Universe. And the Universe always wins in the end, even if it takes years. So I might as well stop biting the bullet and go gracefully.

But now it's me alone against the world.

posted by kimberle at Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Christmas and me are through

Laugh a little louderSing a little prouderSee you in the Rose and CrownWe’ll raise a glass to this old townHome is where the heart isThe end is where the start isHave a happy holidayRemember, boy, to smile when you frownOut by the old churchI can hear them singLong live the king

Oh, Santa Claus, Santa ClausThere’s no Christmas here anymorePut the bells awayBurn the sleighThrow the presents out of my door‘Cos she’s gone, goneEverything they said was trueChristmas and me are through

Why’d you go and leave meI guess you didn’t need meFunny when you did it, heyI’m all alone on Christmas DayWonder where the time goesDressing in the same clothesFunny how the turkey tastesWith lunches from the microwave coldDown by the old schoolI can hear them singLove killed the king

Santa Claus, Santa ClausThere’s no Christmas here anymorePut the bells awayBurn the sleighThrow the presents out of my door‘Cos she’s gone, goneEverything they said was trueChristmas and me are throughChristmas and me are throughChristmas and me are through

Santa Claus, Santa ClausThere’s no Christmas here anymoreThrow the bells awayBurn the sleighThrow the presents out of my door‘Cos she’s gone, goneEverything they said was trueChristmas and meeeeeeeeeeeeeeee are through

posted by kimberle at Sunday, December 19, 2010

Monday, November 29, 2010

Tiffany vs Cartier? Neither, I just want to die

posted by kimberle at Monday, November 29, 2010

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Cause if this is what we've got, then what we've got is golddd

posted by kimberle at Saturday, November 27, 2010

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

I need a hobby now - something to do after dinner, from 10pm onwards. Meaning no musical instruments, no exercise, nothing which will require buying of ingredients/materials, and sorry no volunteering for the poor/old/sick. Most of the time it's TV (the big bang theory, how i met your mother, or a nice movie if i'm lucky)or reading. I would like to put all my youthful time in a bank and take it out when I'm older and richer. But why do I need youth anyway, since all I like doing are watching movies, reading and carrying out experiments.

She breaks promises and can't be trusted. She is condescending. She makes me wait for her. She is busy all the time. She laughs too loudly. She screams when something goes wrong. Sometimes she swears and buries her head in her sleeves. That's when she makes me feel helpless. I'm happy seeing who I love being happy with who she loves.